LD Systems ICOA 15A BT, a wideband active speaker that impresses with excellent sound, even at low frequencies. The ICOA 15A is very versatile, flexible, and suitable for a multitude of applications thanks to its extended coaxial design with a rotatable CD BEM horn and precisely calibrated DynX DSP. This version includes an integrated Bluetooth reception module.
15" / 381 mm low-frequency driver
1" / 25.4 mm high-frequency driver, 1" voice coil
Rotatable BEM horn
Coverage H x V: 90° x 50°
Class D amplification: 1200W max / 300W RMS
DynX DSP with 4 selectable presets, 3-band EQ, and delay function
It's a super powerful speaker that handles outdoor and indoor events brilliantly (of course two pieces) and helped by an 18 sub, Ld Systems rocks everything, they sound amazing for their price and can easily be compared to other speakers that, in my opinion, are just named. Soundcreation, as usual, hats off,???❤️
I bought this speaker, I want to say for those who have an ear to listen to everything that is played, don't make any mistake with this choice, you won't regret it, I guarantee for lovers of good sound, thank you to the manufacturer.
Thanks to Geo for his kindness, seriousness, and the help provided. I had to choose between the HK Sonar 15 Xi and this speaker, and I have no regrets. I came to the showroom for one speaker and left with another when I saw how both performed.
Big and very heavy speaker. I use it in the yard by the pool for ambient music. It heats up a bit even at 25% power. I can't test it at a volume above 25% yet because of the neighbors. I'm waiting for them to go on vacation and I'll come back with details :). The EQ is okay, it does its job. BT works in open space up to about 12m. What I don't understand is that the power drawn from the 220V electrical network is 150 W while the musical power RMS is 300 W (not to mention the 600W continuous, even peak of 1200 W) as stated in the description. (I hope it's not PMPO power like in the '90s that fooled all of Romania). It seems that the poor physics with the related electricity, learned in old school, is turned upside down and is no longer valid nowadays. In this context, I'm skeptical about the real power of the speaker, how can you get, let's say, 600W/1200W from a 220V/150 W power supply. Maybe someone can clarify how the real power of the speaker works. Congratulations to the SoundCreation team. Thank you. Liviu